Hey Josh, I realize I'm late to this discussion, but the easy way to think about analog & HD signals is to think of them as two completely different radio stations, on different frequencies. An FM station on 98.1 MHz uses 98.0-98.2 MHz for the analog signal and 97.9-98.0 plus 98.2-98.3 for the digital carriers. There's a pretty good diagram depicting that on page 34 of this document:
http://www.nrscstandards.org/SG/NRSC-5-C/NRSC-5-C.pdf
That doc is the most comprehensive data I've found on HD radio - both AM & FM. There
ARE situations where those digital carriers can impede analog reception, but it's not due to a decrease in the analog power.
Dave B.
Thank you! Finally someone else is saying what I've been saying all along! To elaborate - spectrum analyzers are NOT radios! They don't show a decrease in analog power. But radios, which have AGC circuitry so they can accommodate a large dynamic range in received signals, get confused by HD sidebands and ramp the gain down, effectively killing sensitivity. I've verified this by breaking the AGC loop in radios for both AM and FM, and patching in a control voltage. It because crystal clear that the radio still had tons of gain for weak signals, but the control voltage I was sending to the radio to restore its sensitivity was very different from what the radio was sending. As a control, I checked on analog only signals of similar strength, and sure enough the AGC voltage was different. The only variable was HD. I even added a switch, and it was gain way down for an HD station, gain up for analog only. I only wish I had the time to do it during a local station's outage a couple of weeks ago.
Short of getting a station to switch HD on and off for me while I experiment, I can't think of a more carefully crafted experiment. I can state with complete confidence that HD severely affects receiver sensitive on both AM and FM bands - an unanticipated consequence of the sidebands. Especially when the radio has wide IF ceramic filters installed, as most do these days, especially AM. Wide filters receive that extra sideband energy, interpret it as more station power, and the AGC circuit scales back the gain. This is not difficult to understand, there are a lot of references on AGC circuits for both AM and FM conveniently on the web. Different manufacturers implement them differently, some better than others - Sony radios used to be notorious have bad AGC on FM resulting in images all over the dial from strong stations. Radio Shack gets it wrong on AM radios. C Crane gets it wrong on AM in the CC-EP on the upper half of the band. GE and RCA generally get it right, and Sony finally started getting it right.
So what if a station's range goes down by 60 miles - the local stations don't care about either Huntsville or Centerville. But the same thing that affects range also affects building penetration and stations DO care about that, whether it is an AM trying to penetrate a house full of CFL bulbs and home networking, or an FM trying to penetrate a steel frame office park. The result of HD is the same. Less listeners because fewer people can hear the signal. Fewer listeners = less ratings and there you have it. HD hurting a station's bottom line.
I really like HD! It gives me format choices that aren't available on analog like Christian rock, smooth jazz, oidies, indie rock, eclectic, 80's and 90's. But as nice as these are, they are provided by stations at the expense of building penetration, and therefore it is a bad business decision for an FM to provide these HD-2 formats for relatively few listeners. They need to blast as much signal to listeners as they can, not fool with a defective technology the consumer simply does not want!